Maya's Musings

Friday, October 28, 2016

I am pleased to introduce Susan Clayton-Goldner who
is joining us today on Maya’s Musings.

Q:
Tell us
something about yourself.

A: I grew up in New Castle, Delaware, one of
five children and the only girl. A grenade blew up in my father’s hand during
WWII. It was before the birth of 4 of his children, including me, but in many
ways that bomb blew up in our lives as well. He was in and out of VA hospitals
for years and suffered from what would now be called PTSD. He was often
difficult, but had more tenacity than anyone I’ve ever met. Tenacity is a
wonderful gift for a writer. My father and his struggles have influenced my
writing more than any other person. He never gave up. He was a carpenter by
trade and the grenade blew off most of his right hand. It broke nearly every
bone in his legs. He was told he’d never walk again. But he did with the help
of a brace. And he became a pretty good one-handed carpenter, as well. If he
could overcome all of that, I could survive the rejections that come from being
a writer.

When I’m not writing, I enjoy making quilts
and stained glass windows. There is something similar about the three forms of
creativity. All of them tell stories using fabric, glass or words.

Q. How
did you get into writing?

A: My father won a portable typewriter in a
poker game when I was 6. I taught myself to type on it and started to write
stories and a little neighbourhood newspaper. Many years have passed. I never
became a poker player, but I did continue to write novels and poetry. In
college I majored in creative writing. It is hard for me to remember a time
when I was not writing. I often don’t know how I feel about something until I
spend time writing about it.

Q. How do you develop your plots and characters?

A: My plots and characters usually come out of a
“what if?” question. Something triggers
an idea for the story. I think about it for a while and then begin to ask
myself the “what if” question. Sometimes the triggering thought is a
concept. Maybe I want to write about
redemption. What if a priest falls in love with a parishioner? What if he tells
her he wants to leave the priesthood and marry her? What if, hours later, her
little girl finds her dead in her car—an apparent carbon monoxide poisoning?
What if it turns out to be murder?

Or in the case of my novel, A Bend In The Willow (scheduled to be released by Tirgearr in
January, 2017) a woman murders her abusive father, disappears, changes her name
and reinvents herself. What if she is leading a respectable life, married to a
medical school dean, when her young son is diagnosed with leukemia? What if she
must return to Kentucky, where she is wanted for murder, in order to find
relatives who may be a bone marrow match for her son?

Q: What inspires
you to write?

A: I’m inspired by what I see around me. By the
questions life raises. Sometimes I’m inspired by stories I read in the paper or
hear about on the news. Mostly I’m inspired by questions about forgiveness,
redemption and love. I often write about characters finding a way back to themselves
or to the family they abandoned.

Q: Who is your
all-time favorite character (from your books) and why?

A:
Catherine Henry, from my book A Bend In
the Willow is one of my favourite characters because of her tenacity and
the way she reinvented herself after a horrible experience. I admire the fact
that she’d give up everything, even her life, in order to save her little boy.

Q:
Do you prefer coffee or tea?

A: tea

Q:
What’s better than chocolate?

A: Not much. Maybe that feeling a writer gets when
she writes, “THE END”.

Q:
If you believed in this sort of thing and could channel an artist from the
beyond, who would it be and why?

A: I think it would be Van Gogh because he was so
off the bell curve and so talented. I’d like to talk with him about the fine
line between sanity and insanity—if there is such a thing—and the role art
plays. Was it his supposed “insanity” that allowed him to see and create The Starry Night? Would he have changed
places with a saner man if it meant losing his amazing creativity?

Q:
What are your plans for the future? Where do you see yourself in five years?

A: I see myself still writing novels, still finding
joy in creating fictional characters, still trying to discover my own truths.

Q:
Any advice for those aspiring novelists out there?

A: My advice is to stick with it. Tenacity pays off.
I received over 100 rejections letters before I finally got a New York agent. I
thought my trials and tribulations were over. She loved the book and was very
vocal in her praise. But a few months later, she accepted a salaried job with
another agency and let go of her clients who weren’t yet making money for her.
I can’t blame her, but it was a huge blow. This was the first time I ever
considered quitting, but I couldn’t. I have to write. I was born to write. And
if you were, too, don’t let anything or anyone stop you.

Thanks for your time, Susan.

Susan
Clayton-Goldner was born in New Castle, Delaware and grew up with four brothers
along the banks of the Delaware River. She is a graduate of the University of
Arizona's Creative Writing Program. Susan has been writing most of her life.
Her novels have been finalists for The Hemingway Award, the Heeken Foundation
Fellowship, the Writers Foundation and the Publishing On-line Contest where she
received a thousand dollar prize. Susan won the National Writers' Association
Novel Award twice for unpublished novels and her poetry has been nominated for
a Pushcart Prize.

Her poetry has appeared in numerous literary journals and anthologies
including Animals as Teachers and Healers,
published by Ballantine Books, Our Mothers/Ourselves,
by the Greenwood Publishing Group, The
Hawaii Pacific Review-Best of a Decade, and New Millennium Writings.

Maya Tyler is a romance author, blogger, wife, and mother. She has a degree in Commerce and her day job is in Finance. Over the past few years, she decided to unleash her creative streak and get serious about writing. So far, she has published a short story “Just for Tonight” in an anthology called With Love from Val and Tyne and her debut paranormal romance novella Dream Hunter. She has also written a few other books (not yet published). Writing mostly paranormal romances, all her books have a common theme – happily ever after. When she’s not writing, you can find her playing with Lego and watching superhero movies with her husband and sons.

Friday, October 21, 2016

I am pleased to introduce Elizabeth Delisi who is
joining us today on Maya’s Musings.

Q:
Tell us
something about yourself.

A: Hi, Maya! Happy to be here. I’m married
with three children and three grandchildren. I live in New Hampshire and love
it! Reading is one of my favorite pastimes, along with knitting, Tarot, and
watching old movies.

Q. How
did you get into writing?

A: The first story I wrote was when I was in 1st
grade. The teacher had given us a take-home spelling assignment. One little
girl wrote a story instead, and the teacher praised her effort. I said I wanted
to write a story too, but I was told I couldn’t. Well, I *did* write a story
anyway…but I also did my spelling assignment.

Since then, I’ve always enjoyed writing, whether I
worked on fiction, poetry, or papers written for various school assignments. I
was the only kid in class who, when told to write a paper, said “Yes!” I wrote
my first novel—well, about half of a very short novel—when I was in 8th
grade. After that, I was completely hooked.

Q. How do you develop your plots and characters?

A: Usually, something I read, watch or hear sparks
the basic idea of a plot. Often that includes taking the actual event and using
the words, “What if?” That’s a start. Once I have a rough idea of the road the
plot might take, the main characters become clear.

For some reason, the plot always comes first with
me, the characters appearing second. I do jot things down as they occur to me
in a loose outline form, whether it’s a plot point, a question to research, or
bits of dialogue. I rely on it as I write, changing or adding to the outline as
required.

Q: What inspires
you to write?

A: My main inspiration is that I love to read.
Reading has been a great pleasure for me throughout my life, and when I write,
I am able to give back a little of that pleasure and pass it on to other
readers.

Q: Who is your
all-time favorite character (from a book) and why?

A:
Ooh, tough one. My first instant thought is Scarlett from GONE WITH THE WIND. I
do admire her strength and stubbornness. But she’s a little too selfish for me.
Kivrin, the heroine in Connie Willis’s book DOOMSDAY BOOK, is brave and never
gives up, no matter how bad things become. But in flashing a glance over my
bookshelves, I find the person I admire the most is Anne Frank, author of DIARY
OF A YOUNG GIRL. She displayed the courage and wisdom of a much older person in
the face of certain tragedy, and the world is the poorer for her loss.

Q:
Do you prefer coffee or tea?

A: Tea if it’s the right flavor of black tea; or
coffee drinks with other things mixed in. Like chocolate!

Q:
What’s better than chocolate?

A: Um…nothing?

Q:
If you believed in this sort of thing and could channel an artist from the
beyond, who would it be and why?

A: Another tough one. If you mean artist as in one
of the arts, I’d say the person I’d most like to bring back would be my dear
friend Lynne, who passed away suddenly of an unexpected blood clot not long
ago. She loved to write, and had some success with essays in Chicken Soup and
other anthologies. She was working on a middle grade novel, and was so excited
about it. I will never stop missing her, and wondering what glorious books the
world will now be without.

Q:
What are your plans for the future? Where do you see yourself in five years?

A: The future is always a bit nebulous. But I hope
in five years to be still writing, with my husband retired and we’re living in
the house we plan to build for our retirement up in the White Mountains of New
Hampshire.

Q:
Any advice for those aspiring novelists out there?

A: Never give up. Read, read, read, and write,
write, write. Try to read critically, to discover how your favorite authors
achieve the effects they get. Then put them to use in your own work.

Maya Tyler is a romance author, blogger, wife, and mother. She has a degree in Commerce and her day job is in Finance. Over the past few years, she decided to unleash her creative streak and get serious about writing. So far, she has published a short story “Just for Tonight” in an anthology called With Love from Val and Tyne and her debut paranormal romance novella Dream Hunter. She has also written a few other books (not yet published). Writing mostly paranormal romances, all her books have a common theme – happily ever after. When she’s not writing, you can find her playing with Lego and watching superhero movies with her husband and sons.

About Me

Maya Tyler is a romance author, blogger, wife, and mother. She has a degree in Commerce and her day job is in Finance. Over the past few years, she decided to unleash her creative streak and get serious about writing. So far, she has published a short story “Just for Tonight” in an anthology called With Love from Val and Tyne and her debut paranormal romance novella Dream Hunter. She has also written a few other books (not yet published). Writing mostly paranormal romances, all her books have a common theme – happily ever after. When she’s not writing, you can find her playing with Lego and watching superhero movies with her husband and sons.